Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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DA440 |
The social topography of a rural community : scenes of labouring life in seventeenth century England / The revolution in time : chronology, modernity, and 1688-1689 in England / |
2 |
DA440 .A8 1927 | Memoirs of the court of England in 1675 / | 1 |
DA440 .A9513 1927i | Memoirs of the court of England in 1675 | 1 |
DA440 .B44 | Das neu-geharnischte Gross-Britannien, das ist : wahre Landes-und Standes-Beschaffenheit derer drey vereinigten Königreiche Engel-Schott-und Irrlands ... / | 1 |
DA440 .B7 1960 | Restoration England. | 1 |
DA440 .C58 1993 | The Puritan gentry besieged, 1650-1700 / | 1 |
DA440 .C58 1993eb | The Puritan gentry besieged, 1650-1700 | 1 |
DA440 .C64 | A collection out of the book called Liber regalis, remaining in the treasury of the church of Westminster. Touching the coronation of the King and Queen together, according to the usual form. | 2 |
DA440 .H36 2016 | Women of letters : gender, writing and the life of the mind in early modern England / | 1 |
DA440 .H68 2006 | Houses and the hearth tax : the later Stuart house and society / | 1 |
DA440 .K554 2011 | The Devil in disguise : deception, delusion, and fanaticism in the early English enlightenment / | 1 |
DA440 .M47 | Two speeches the one spoken by Sir Audley Mervin, speaker of the honourable House of Commons, upon the reception and return of James, Duke of Ormond, Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, July 27, 1662 : the other at His Graces entrance into the Castle of Dublin by Mr. Norris Jephson. | 2 |
DA440 .R47 1986 | Restoration and revolution / | 1 |
DA440 .S52 1696 | Discourses and essays, useful for the vain modish ladies and their gallants as also upon several subjects moral and divine : in two parts / | 2 |
DA442 1652 .B73 | To the supreme authority, the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England a serious charge and accusation against Mr. Edw. Winslow, one of the commissioners for compounding at Haberdashers Hall / | 2 |
DA442 1659 .C87 | A Curtain-conference being a discourse betwixt (the late Lord Lambert, now) John Lambert, Esq. and his Lady, as they lay a bed together one night at their house at Wimbleton : related by the Lady Lambert to Tom Trim, her gentleman usher, (one well acquainted with all her secrets) and now by him printed for publick satisfaction. | 1 |
DA442 1659 .H86 | The Humble representation and remonstrance of divers free-men of England well-affected to Parliaments, to the Right Honourable the Councel of Officers of the Army | 2 |
DA443.H37 1690 | The happy meeting of King William and Queen Mary at his return from and after his conquest in Ireland | 1 |
DA444.4 .E53 1654 | An ordinance for indempnitie to the English Protestants of the province of Munster in Ireland | 2 |
DA445 |
The oath to be ministred unto every freeman of the city of Dublin Carolo-logie: or, Great Britains great glory, in his Sacred Majesty Charles the Second, by the grace of God, King of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, defender of the faith delivered in a speech at the solemn proclaiming our said Royal Soveraign before some thousands of people at Lillshil in the county of Salop, on the anniversary day of His Majesties nativity, and by happy providence the same day His Majesty was magnificently received into London / Henry Bennet, Earl of Arlington, and His World : Restoration Court, Politics and Diplomacy / His Majesties gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, with the Lord Keepers, on Monday February 14, 1669/70 His Majesties most gracious speech together with the Lord Chancellors to both Houses of Parliament to which is added His Lordships several speeches, as also those of Sir Job Charleton, at his admission of Speaker to the Honourable House of Commons : delivered at the opening of the Parliament, on Tuesday February 4, and Wednesday February 5, 1672 / Courting the Moderates : Ideology, Propaganda, and the Emergence of Party, 1660-1678. His Majesties declaration for enforcing a late order made in Council His Majesties gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, the eighteenth day of January, 1666 His Majesties gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament, at their prorogation, November 4, 1673 His Majesties gracious speech together with the Lord Keepers, to both Houses of Parliament, January 7, 1673/4 |
11 |